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Hello Gary,
I am up against the same issues noted herein. I am at Jane Beaufort and Sir Edward Stradling and have parents of Jane as Cardinal Henry Beaufort and Alice Fitzalan, which means if this is correct, you know what happens from John Of Gaunt all the way back. It's exciting, but weird too. I can't disprove Jane's father as being the Cardinal, nor can I disprove her mother as being Alice.
For me, my line goes from The Palmers/Verney, to Palmer/ Stradling, Some Arundel's, Mathew's, Dinham's and Herbert and Chidioc to Sir Edward Stradling and Jane Beaufort.
Love to hear from you!
Tommy
Tommy, this is also my line. Without all the info. in front of me, it is pretty close, except, mine goes all the way from the FitzAllen to my American Allen. My Great Great Grandmother was an Allen, and that's how I traced it back. But, I also have another line that goes back to John of Gaunt's mother. As a matter of fact, I have several lines that goes to Edward III (and of course---backwards). Finally in the 1800's my Allen line married into the Sims line. The Sims/Symes line goes all the way back to Sir ?? Sims/Symes, KG (I forget his first name, I think its John). So, there is another example of who her (Jane) ancestry is involved with.
I have thought about doing the Ancestry DNA, but I don't have an account (except the free one) with Ancestry. So, I have to come up with the money to do both!
Than maybe I can find out who all I am related too! Ha!
Wanda
Gary, I agree my friend. Plus I see allot of connectivity with the Palmer's who were knights and hung out with the King, then I see Alice Fitzalan who has Plantagenet on her side too. Also, Elizabeth Verney (Another Grandmother) was God-Daughter to the Queen. I did see some other similar family names hanging around on the other lines as well. Wild. If you have any info at all, would love it!
When Henry was Bishop of Lincoln, he had an affair with, some believe, Alice FitzAlan (1378–1415), the daughter of Richard FitzAlan and Elizabeth de Bohun, though there is no real evidence to support this. He fathered an illegitimate daughter, Jane Beaufort, in 1402, who some make Alice's daughter. Both Jane and her husband Sir Edward Stradling, were named in Cardinal Beaufort's will. Their marriage about 1423 brought Sir Edward into the political orbit of his shrewd and assertive father-in-law, to whom he may have owed his appointment as chamberlain of South Wales in December 1423, a position he held until March 1437.[13] The idea of Jane's mother being Alice Fitzalan is possibly a legend of Tudor-era descendants of Sir Edward and Jane Stradling. There is no late-14th/early-15th century documentation to support this affair at all, and the surviving documentation entirely discounts it. However, a blood connection to Cardinal Beaufort would itself be prestigious, regardless of the mother or her marital status.
Given the nature of the event, would you really expect that anyone would have documented it? Of course it's not documented, but it is well known that the monarchs of medieval Europe, as well as their nobles, were notorious for illicit affairs and that sometimes, there was illegitimate issue from these affairs, despite all efforts to cover it up. So, the absence of evidence is not evidence of absence of illegitimate offspring.
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